Rusfertide Improves Responses in Phlebotomy-Dependent Polycythemia Vera

Caroline Seymour

Patients with phlebotomy-dependent polycythemia vera, a type of myeloproliferative neoplasm, treated with rusfertide experienced a response rate of 60% (n = 18/30) compared with 17% (n = 5/29) in those who received placebo (P = .002), according to updated findings from part 2 of the phase 2 REVIVE trial (NCT04057040) published in the New England Journal of Medicine.1

The international trial was designed with 3 parts: a 28-week, open-label, dose-finding portion in which rusfertide was added to a patient’s ongoing therapy of phlebotomy alone or cytoreductive therapy with optional phlebotomy; a double-blind, randomized withdrawal portion wherein patients were randomly assigned to receive rusfertide or placebo for 12 weeks (weeks 29 to 41); and an open-label extension period following patients on rusfertide therapy for up to 3 years.

Findings from part 1 showed that the estimated mean number of annual phlebotomies was 8.7±2.9 during the 28 weeks before the first dose of rusfertide and 0.6±1.0 during part 1 (estimated difference, 8.1 phlebotomies per year). Moreover, the mean maximum hematocrit level was 44.5±2.2% during part 1 vs 50.0±5.8% during the 28 weeks before the first dose of rusfertide. Patient quality of life was also improved on rusfertide, with a lower severity of disease-related symptoms.

“Rusfertide appears to represent a significant step forward in treating [patients with] polycythemia vera through its unique approach of limiting the amount of iron available for blood cell production,” Marina Kremyanskaya, MD, PhD, an associate professor of medicine (hematology and medical oncology) at Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, New York, and lead author of the study, stated in a news release.2 “Pending further clinical studies, this injectable agent could become a valuable therapeutic tool for a disease which many patients and their physicians struggle to bring under control.”

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Years After Genetic Finding, Drugs Targeting CALR-Mutant Myeloproliferative Neoplasms Enter Trials

NEW YORK – More than a decade after mutations in the CALR gene were first linked to the development of myeloproliferative neoplasms, CALR-targeted drug candidates are advancing to Phase I clinical trials.

If these drugs reach the market, they could provide a treatment option for a group of patients with myelofibrosis and essential thrombocythemia who typically must wait until their condition turns serious to attempt a risky stem cell transplant.

About 300,000 patients in the US have myeloproliferative neoplasms. Kapila Vigas, CEO of the MPN Research Foundation, said patients can have very different presentations of the disease, and it can take “years or decades” to get a diagnosis. Although myeloproliferative neoplasms are classified as chronic cancers that patients can live with for many years with blood count monitoring, Vigas said some patients can abruptly progress, and their condition can become serious.

“That uncertainty is really concerning to patients,” Vigas said. “We think from a psychosocial perspective, it’s worse than an acute cancer because while cancer may be more serious, it’s predictable, and there’s a plan and a protocol, whereas when you’re diagnosed with [a myeloproliferative neoplasm] watch and wait is almost a first-line approach. It just adds to the anxiety.”

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